KEVIN DONNELLY suggests that the task of transforming cultural spaces is far from over and that photography still has a key role to play
ANY adults accompanying kids to oddball TV adventurer Spongebob’s second film in 3D are in luck because it’s funny, fast, and fatuous.
Animation and live action blend smartly, with Antonio Banderas hamming it up as a pirate whose quest for a magical book pits him against the eponymous undersea hero.
Meanwhile Spongebob and his cartoon colleagues are hunting an irreplaceable stolen formula for the Krabbie Patties that are the raison d’etre for the undersea fast-food joint where Spongebob works.
ANDY HEDGECOCK, MARIA DUARTE and ANGUS REID review The Six Billion Dollar Man, Avatar: Fire and Ash, Goodbye June, and Super Elfkins
Star cartoonist MALC MCGOOKIN finds lessons for today in the punch, and the economy of line, of an extraordinary generation of illustrators
ANDY HEDGECOCK and MARIA DUARTE review The Ceremony, Eddington, The Life of Chuck, and The Thursday Murder Club
MARIA DUARTE and ANGUS REID review Friendship, Four Letters of Love, Tin Soldier and The Ballad of Suzanne Cesaire


